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Zimbabwe:
Southern Africa's First Reported Drop In HIV
February
3, 2006
Researchers
have reported the first decline in HIV prevalence in southern Africa,
attributing the drop, recorded in eastern Zimbabwe, to changes in sexual
behavior.
Source:
SciDev.net
Computer
Virus Fells Russian Stock Exchange
February
3, 2006
As
the world waited for one computer virus to strike on Friday, another wriggled
its way into the Russian stock exchange and knocked it offline.
Computer
experts had warned that 3 February could bring gloom for many as a computer
virus called Nyxem was scheduled to start deleting files on machines it had
infected.
Source:
New Scientist.com
New
Bird Flu Deaths in Indonesia
February
4, 2006
Two
more Indonesians have died of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu, bringing the
nation's death toll to 16. the recent deaths had been confirmed by a World
Health Organization-affiliated laboratory in Hong Kong.
Source:
BBC News
Stranded
Sperm Whale Dies in Humber Estuary
February
5, 2006
Rescuers
yesterday failed in a dramatic attempt to save a rare sperm whale stranded at
the mouth of the Humber estuary. The leviathan's death, on a sandbank
three-quarters of a mile from the shore, is the second of a whale along the east
coast in as many weeks.
Source:
Independent.co.uk
US
And UN Help Iraq Fight Bird Flu
February
5, 2006
American
and U.N. health experts tried Sunday to help this war-ravaged country fight a
new battle against bird flu, and officials said at least eight people have been
hospitalized with symptoms similar to those caused by the virus. Under U.S.
military guard, American and World Health Organization epidemiologists,
veterinary experts and clinicians are expected to work together across the
northern Kurdistan region to find out how the disease entered Iraq and how to
contain it.
Source:
ABC News
Memory
Problems at Menopause: Nothing to Forget About
February
6, 2006
The
team from the University of Rochester Medical Center found that the issue is not
really impaired memory. Instead, the team found a link between complaints of
forgetfulness and the way middle-aged, stressed women learn or
"encode" new information..
Source:
ScienceDaily.com
Pesticide
Cocktail Kills US Frogs
February
7, 2006
Pesticides
used by US corn growers are combining to kill off the country's native frogs.
Research shows that commonly used pesticides, fairly harmless by themselves, are
mixing to create a toxic soup in runoff water. This stunts the frogs' sexual
development and leaves them susceptible to fatal infections.
Source:
Nature.com
Small
Babies Can Adapt
February
8, 2006
A
Canadian study has good news for parents of babies born at an extremely low
birth weight: As these children grow up, they seem to catch up with their
normal-birth-weight peers - graduating from high school, getting jobs, living on
their own and entering into adult relationships.
Source:
News24.com
Comet
Dust Samples Come to the UK
February
9, 2006
The
first samples of dust from a comet billions of miles away have arrived in the UK
to undergo analysis. The grains were captured by the US space agency's
Stardust probe from a comet dating back to the beginning of our universe, 4.6
billion years ago.
Source:
BBC News
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